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Economics: Public Sector

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Full lesson including notes, simple definitions, examples, and graphs. Ch 5: Topics: Government in Circular Flow Technical Efficiency Economic Efficiency Types of Efficiency Market Failure Pareto Efficiency Micro/Macroeconomic Policy Budget Surplus/Deficit

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  • June 13, 2021
  • 7
  • 2020/2021
  • Class notes
  • Mr. g
  • All classes
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Economics 5: Public Sector
Government in the circular flow

 Government collects tax from households/firms
 Government buys resources from households and buys goods/services from firms
 Government pays households for resources and pays firms for goods/services
Leakage: Taxes
Injection: Government spending
Technical efficiency: When the economy operates on PPF
No unemployed or underemployed resources
 Necessary condition for economic efficiency because movement toward
PFF will benefit persons


Economic efficiency: Occurs when any change benefitting someone harms someone else

 No market imperfections interfering with “ideal” market
 Occurs because voluntary trade benefits both buyer/seller
 Seller: sells item when it results in a bigger payment than keeping it
 Buyer: buys item when is it preferred over alternative item
 Trade: occurs: all potential gains are exhausted & economic efficiency occurs


Market failure: “Markets can’t achieve economic efficiency”
More Types of market failures in economy
Market failure: Free market not pareto efficient on its own
 We could make somebody better off without making somebody worse off
 Need government intervention
Externalities:

 Negative: Oversupply  Factory make steel & dump waste in river. Kids
play in river and gets sick. Thus, the factory imposing cost on family. Note:
if it was agreed to pay off the family $20000 annually, it wouldn’t be
externality
 Positive: Undersupply  1st party benefiting 2nd without benefitting
themselves. I got a flu shot, so you less likely to get sick

, Public good:
 Nonrivalrous: Undersupply: National defense (France). Spaniard move to
France & won’t interfere with French national defense
 Rivalrous: I eat fish, 1 less for others to eat
 Nonexcludable: No supply: France can’t exclude Spaniard from national
defense, creating Free rider problem: Spaniard have no incentive to
voluntarily pay national defense unless government intervention: Tax


Incomplete information: Market don’t supply enough information to consumers. Example:
People don’t know interest rate, Don’t know what in drugs (Gov ensure labels)
Monopoly: Lack of competition (Price = Market Cost) to influence prices. Thus P>MC
 Single firm supply the market
 Monopolist gain, society lose
 Net worst off
Incomplete market:
 Market don’t develop, even through individuals
 Insurance market can’t develop because adverse selection &
information asymmetry: healthy persons willing to pay $200
monthly, insurance offer $150. This Willingness to pay > Cost. But
sick people want insurance too. When sick people sign up, the
company loses money so they raise prices.
 Information asymmetry: Client know more about health than
about insurance
High unemployment/Inflation: Serious macroeconomic problem
Efficiency: Produce more output with every unit of input (not wasting)
Example: use 60 mangoes to make more jam  use resources efficiently
Types of efficiency: Allocative:
1 Allocative: Concerned with the optimal distribution of
goods/services
2 Productive: Concerned with the optimal method of producing
goods/services at lowest cost  On PFF curve

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